Nazi Germany sought to create a superman, for this purpose experiments were carried out on people in concentration camps.
Tens of thousands of people were brutally tortured for this purpose. Human experiments were also carried out to study the effects of exposure to various bacteria. Each concentration camp had its own "specialization". Mankind has no right to forget such names as Buchenwald or Auschwitz. The experiments on people who were carried out there are striking in their cruelty.
The Nazis were absolutely unprepared to wage war in the Russian winter. To study the consequences of a long stay in the cold or in icy water, the prisoners were lowered into containers and driven out into the cold. As a result of these tests, a "collar" appeared on the life jackets of the Luftwaffe pilots, which did not allow hypothermia of the cerebellum.
Germany kept huge stocks of the typhus virus, and subsequently it was planned to use bacteriological weapons. In order to protect the Wehrmacht soldiers, a vaccine was developed. One of the first infected was a groupGypsies out of 26 people. Soon six of them died from the disease. Such a high mortality was not an indicator of the reliability of the serum, and experiments on humans were continued. In 1944, eighty gypsies from the Natzweiler camp were infected, six of them fell ill, but even they were not provided with any medical care. In the same year, all participants in the experiment died either from illness or at the hands of camp guards.
The experiments of the Nazis on people are striking in their scope. The idea of national superiority made it possible to consider the rest of the peoples as biological material, the Germans did not reckon with the victims. Tests were carried out on blood transfusion of various Rh factors, attempts were made to create Siamese twins. Experiments on humans were carried out in a variety of climatic and physical conditions.
The Germans kept a clear classification in everything. For example, Russian prisoners of Buchenwald were used to test various incendiary mixtures. Serums, vaccines and new medicines were tested on gypsies.
One of the bloodiest executioners was Dr. Mengele. His "speci alty" was twins. He personally supervised the selection procedure for the "most interesting specimens." Of the one and a half thousand pairs of twins, no more than two hundred survived. "Biological material" was poisoned with various chemicals, trying to influence the color of the eyes. One of the twins could be poisoned by studying the reaction of the other. Mengele did not wait for the arrival of Soviet troops in Auschwitz and fled to Latin America, where he could hide from justice.
Hundreds of thousands of crippled and ruined destinies were the result of inhuman experiments in Nazi Germany. The concentration camps were death factories where people were considered animals unworthy of life. Many facts of experiments on people continue to be revealed to this day. Perhaps in this way the Nazis tried to improve their own lives, but you cannot build your happiness on the grief and tears of others.